Not since they shut down API access. Now it’s obvious why they did that.
I am trying to focus on posting source documents, as opposed to someone else’s reporting on source documents.
Not since they shut down API access. Now it’s obvious why they did that.
The only way Microsoft or OpenAI would know this would be to spy on chatbot sessions. I’m sure the terms of service—if I bothered to read them—gives them that permission.
Well there’s your problem.
Would it really matter? It’s just as easy to subscribe and then say/do whatever. Only accounts that have been subscribed for a period of time? Subscribe and wait. Have a certain post and/or comment reputation? It’s not terribly hard to speak to a specific audience and accomplish that. Make any of those extra parameters too severe, and you limit the community growth.
Crowdsourcing of ideas means that bad ideas are no worse than good ones, and in an evolutionary way, they’re probably better at replication, strength, retention - and when a core tenet of that “bad” idea is that you must actively reject the opposing good ideas, that’s how bad ideas overtake good ones.
Can you short an IPO?
Somewhere around here I have the HP optical mouse that used to come with their desktops. It finally quit working and I had to replace it, and I had to do the math for how long I had been using it.
Twenty years.
Low rolling resistance tires tend to be not very great in snow. They get that low rolling resistance partly by not having a very sticky compound, and partly by not having a very aggressive tread pattern (among other things, I’m sure). Both of those factors are going to have an impact on traction on anything but dry pavement.
It might also be due to other design choices. I’ve got a 2015 Ford Fusion PHEV, and I had a 2013 Fusion Hybrid before that; they suck so bad in the snow with normal all-season tires that I have to keep a finger on the electric parking brake switch to make sure I can stop if there’s any snow on the ground.
I am large, I contain multitudes.
Three more than you.
Pay no attention to the people who don’t have kids. You’re doing just fine. The fact that you’re asking honestly makes you a better parent than many.
Kids, as you well know, are gonna figure out unimaginable ways to get themselves in trouble. I’ve had to tell more than one of my kids, “I’m gonna let you make all the mistakes you want, and I’m gonna be there to pick you up, but I am not going to let you make permanent mistakes.” When it comes to advertising, microtransactions, OnlyFans (yes, OnlyFans), the lesson is “these things exist for one purpose, and that is to separate you from your money as much as possible.” If you are paying for something, stop and consider whether you can get a substantially similar thing for free, or at least for a lot cheaper.
From reading your other comments, it sounds like you and the other parents all agreed together to drop the hammer on all the kids at once. That is a good idea, and it’s great that you have lines of communication open to your kid’s friends’ parents. That’s going to be important when they’re older and driving cars, and having access to intoxicants and mall ninja shit.
To your actual question - I saw someone mention Minecraft, that is a fantastic choice. There are “skins” and shit that can be bought, but the game itself it absolutely fully playable and enjoyable without anything beyond the initial game purchase. Running a private server is pretty easy, and I would recommend it, so that the friend group always has a place they can go where the annoyances of the internet-at-large are excluded. Besides that, a kid who is motivated to modify his own Minecraft server is going to be driven to figure out how to do it, and that kind of skill will be super useful for oh so many things throughout life.
If they like arena combat games, Crossout is pretty fun. World of Tanks is okay, but the grind curve is steep. War Thunder is fun for planes and ships, but I am not a fan of their tank play mechanics. All of those are free to play, yes you can buy stuff, but you absolutely do not have to.
There’s a single player game that I have to mention: The Long Dark. Winter survival, and there’s also a storyline mode. The storyline is really good, and the map is absolutely vast. While it’s not one they would be able to play together, it’s a great exploration and survival game, and I would be remiss if I didn’t point it out.
Says the person with no kids.
Request for clarifications “for beginners”:
systemd, XOrg, Wayland - you have mentioned those without an explanation of what they are.
Last time I did anything with linux, Ubuntu was all the rage. I’m interested in hearing more details about what makes it a distro to avoid.
@snaptastic, please let me know if this comment is relevant enough.
Here I am, all ready to give it a whirl. Seems like a tutorial is in order.
@snaptastic Please let me know whether this comment passes your relevancy test.
Somebody mentioned Voodoo cards, I had a bit of information that related to that. That’s how discussions work; they kind of go where they go.
But I’ll make absolutely sure to get your permission before I comment again.
I bet you’re fun at parties.
Voodoo cards are worth money to the right people. They’re used in a bunch of coin-op arcade games.
What about his deal with Microsoft?
oh no somebody’s mad
No idea, I don’t use it.
That’s just God telling you to go to the bad gateway.